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So Free

Neamen’s debut album “So Free” introduces a new voice to smooth jazz, demonstrating a remarkable freshness and maturity. Produced by Jay Soto, The CD offers ten tracks conveying a wide range of moods and musical sentiments with a confident feel from start to finish.
Together Lyles and Soto have assembled a top-flight cast of contributors for this effort, all of whom give the album a sense of musical prowess seldom heard in a debut release. Brian Simpson and Jeff Lorber provide nuanced keyboard tracks; Mel Brown and Ray Beindeau lay down electric bass lines; and Freddie Fox provides confident rhythm and solo guitar. Other contributors include: Anthony Morra and Rayford Griffin (drums), Darren Rahn (alto and tenor sax), Jason Rahn (trumpet & flugelhorn) and Michael Broening (B3 synth). David Lancette and Jodi Light also provide smooth vocals. With a great cast of contributors, “So Free” proves to establish Neamen Lyles as a new voice in the definition of smooth.

Genre: Jazz: Smooth Jazz

Release Date: 2011

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ABOUT THIS ALBUM

Album Notes

So Free, a debut release by Tucson-based saxophonist Neamen Lyles, demonstrates – that Neamen knows his way around the world of smooth jazz. For a debut album, the recording demonstrates both a remarkable freshness and a surprising level of musical maturity, all of which bodes well for Neamen’s future in the music business.

The CD offers ten tracks conveying a wide range of moods and musical sentiments, but with an uplifting, confident feel from start to finish. The album was produced by Pop/jazz veteran Jay Soto (Nu Groove Records), who contributes guitar, keyboard tracks, and composed or co-wrote most of the material with Lyles. In addition to Soto, the recording features well established keyboardist Jeff Lorber (Heads Up International) and Brian Simpson (Shanachie), along with familiar star, electric bassist Mel Brown.

But, the star of the show is Neamen’s seasoned yet free-wheeling solo lines, which both honor the melody and simultaneously take the listener to unexpected musical destinations – clearly a combination that expresses Neamen’s love of the music and his natural, joyful fluency. According to Neamen, “The album is designed to be something that anyone can listen to. It’s heavily focused on current pop music in its appearance and delivery, but at the core it always reaches for the artistic maturity of jazz.” So Free reflects not only Neamen’s deft and nuanced sax chops; it also reveals the depth of his musical training, his immersion in the smooth jazz genre since his early years, and influence of smooth jazz giants: David Sanborn, Gerald Albright, Eric Marienthal, Grover Washington, Jr. and beyond. None of this should be taken lightly; the recording is bound to draw attention to this gifted, ambitious soloist from day one. Another testament to the musicality of Lyles music is “Things Change,” is receiving regular national airplay on The Weather Channel.

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